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Andreas U Monsch


Andreas.Monsch@unibas.ch

Journal articles

2011
Gwenaëlle Douaud, Saâd Jbabdi, Timothy E J Behrens, Ricarda A Menke, Achim Gass, Andreas U Monsch, Anil Rao, Brandon Whitcher, Gordon Kindlmann, Paul M Matthews, Stephen Smith (2011)  DTI measures in crossing-fibre areas: Increased diffusion anisotropy reveals early white matter alteration in MCI and mild Alzheimer's disease.   Neuroimage 55: 3. 880-890 Apr  
Abstract: Though mild cognitive impairment is an intermediate clinical state between healthy aging and Alzheimer's disease (AD), there are very few whole-brain voxel-wise diffusion MRI studies directly comparing changes in healthy control, mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD subjects. Here we report whole-brain findings from a comprehensive study of diffusion tensor indices and probabilistic tractography obtained in a very large population of healthy controls, MCI and probable AD subjects. As expected from the literature, all diffusion indices converged to show that the cingulum bundle, the uncinate fasciculus, the entire corpus callosum and the superior longitudinal fasciculus are the most affected white matter tracts in AD. Significant differences between MCI and AD were essentially confined to the corpus callosum. More importantly, we introduce for the first time in a degenerative disorder an application of a recently developed tensor index, the "mode" of anisotropy, as well as probabilistic crossing-fibre tractography. The mode of anisotropy specifies the type of anisotropy as a continuous measure reflecting differences in shape of the diffusion tensor ranging from planar (e.g., in regions of crossing fibres from two fibre populations of similar density or regions of "kissing" fibres) to linear (e.g., in regions where one fibre population orientation predominates), while probabilistic crossing-fibre tractography allows to accurately trace pathways from a crossing-fibre region. Remarkably, when looking for whole-brain diffusion differences between MCI patients and healthy subjects, the only region with significant abnormalities was a region of crossing fibres in the centrum semiovale, showing an increased mode of anisotropy. The only white matter region demonstrating a significant difference in correlations between neuropsychological scores and a diffusion measure (mode of anisotropy) across the three groups was the same region of crossing fibres. Further examination using probabilistic tractography established explicitly and quantitatively that this previously unreported increase of mode and co-localised increase of fractional anisotropy was explained by a relative preservation of motor-related projection fibres (at this early stage of the disease) crossing the association fibres of the superior longitudinal fasciculus. These findings emphasise the benefit of looking at the more complex regions in which spared and affected pathways are crossing to detect very early alterations of the white matter that could not be detected in regions consisting of one fibre population only. Finally, the methods used in this study may have general applicability for other degenerative disorders and, beyond the clinical sphere, they could contribute to a better quantification and understanding of subtle effects generated by normal processes such as visuospatial attention or motor learning.
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2010
Michael M Ehrensperger, Andreas U Monsch (2010)  [Delirium and dementia].   Ther Umsch 67: 2. 84-86 Feb  
Abstract: Dementia and delirium are nosologic entities with overlapping presenting symptoms. The diagnostic criteria of dementia and of mild cognitive impairment-conceptualized as prodromal state of dementia-are discussed here and the importance of very early diagnosis of cognitive decline and the integration of information from informants in the diagnostic process is highlighted. Prominent features of vascular dementia and of dementia with Lewy bodies which are important for differential diagnosis and therapy are described.
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Michael M Ehrensperger, Manfred Berres, Kirsten I Taylor, Andreas U Monsch (2010)  Screening properties of the German IQCODE with a two-year time frame in MCI and early Alzheimer's disease.   Int Psychogeriatr 22: 1. 91-100 Feb  
Abstract: The Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE) is a widely used screening tool for dementia. We aimed to determine the ability of the German version of the 16-item IQCODE with a two-year time frame to discriminate healthy mature control participants (NC) from mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and probable early Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients (all with Mini-mental State Examination (MMSE) scores >or= 24/30) and to optimize diagnostic discriminability by shortening the IQCODE.
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Julie E Davidson, Michael C Irizarry, Bethany C Bray, Sally Wetten, Nicholas Galwey, Rachel Gibson, Michael Borrie, Richard Delisle, Howard H Feldman, Ging-Yuek Hsiung, Luis Fornazzari, Serge Gauthier, Danilo Guzman, Inge Loy-English, Ron Keren, Andrew Kertesz, Peter St George-Hyslop, John Wherrett, Andreas U Monsch (2010)  An exploration of cognitive subgroups in Alzheimer's disease.   J Int Neuropsychol Soc 16: 2. 233-243 Mar  
Abstract: Heterogeneity is observed in the patterns of cognition in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Such heterogeneity might suggest the involvement of different etiological pathways or different host responses to pathology. A total of 627 subjects with mild/moderate AD underwent cognitive assessment with the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and the Dementia Rating Scale-2 (DRS-2). Latent class analysis (LCA) was performed on cognition subscale data to identify and characterize cognitive subgroups. Clinical, demographic, and genetic factors were explored for association with class membership. LCA suggested the existence of four subgroups; one group with mild and another with severe global impairment across the cognitive domains, one group with primary impairments in attention and construction, and another group with primary deficits in memory and orientation. Education, disease duration, age, Apolipoprotein E-epsilon4 (APOE epsilon4) status, gender, presence of grasp reflex, white matter changes, and early or prominent visuospatial impairment were all associated with class membership. Our results support the existence of heterogeneity in patterns of cognitive impairment in AD. Our observation of classes characterized by predominant deficits in attention/construction and memory respectively deserves further exploration as does the association between membership in the attention/construction class and APOE epsilon4 negative status.
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Christoph S Burkhart, Salome Dell-Kuster, Melanie Gamberini, Ariane Moeckli, Martin Grapow, Miodrag Filipovic, Manfred D Seeberger, Andreas U Monsch, Stephan P Strebel, Luzius A Steiner (2010)  Modifiable and nonmodifiable risk factors for postoperative delirium after cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass.   J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth 24: 4. 555-559 Aug  
Abstract: Postoperative delirium after cardiac surgery is associated with increased morbidity and mortality as well as prolonged stay in both the intensive care unit and the hospital. The authors sought to identify modifiable risk factors associated with the development of postoperative delirium in elderly patients after elective cardiac surgery in order to be able to design follow-up studies aimed at the prevention of delirium by optimizing perioperative management.
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Michael M Ehrensperger, Manfred Berres, Kirsten I Taylor, Andreas U Monsch (2010)  Early detection of Alzheimer's disease with a total score of the German CERAD.   J Int Neuropsychol Soc 16: 5. 910-920 Sep  
Abstract: The goal of the present study was to evaluate the diagnostic discriminability of three different global scores for the German version of the Consortium to Establish a Registry on Alzheimer's Disease-Neuropsychological Assessment Battery (CERAD-NAB). The CERAD-NAB was administered to 1100 healthy control participants [NC; Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) mean = 28.9] and 352 patients with very mild Alzheimer's disease (AD; MMSE mean = 26.1) at baseline and subsets of participants at follow-up an average of 2.4 (NC) and 1.2 (AD) years later. We calculated the following global scores: Chandler et al.'s (2005) score (summed raw scores), logistic regression on principal components analysis scores (PCA-LR), and logistic regression on demographically corrected CERAD-NAB variables (LR). Correct classification rates (CCR) were compared with areas under the receiver operating characteristics curves (AUC). The CCR of the LR score (AUC = .976) exceeded that of the PCA-LR, while the PCA-LR (AUC = .968) and Chandler (AUC = .968) scores performed comparably. Retest data improved the CCR of the PCA-LR and Chandler (trend) scores. Thus, for the German CERAD-NAB, Chandler et al.'s total score provided an effective global measure of cognitive functioning, whereby the inclusion of retest data tended to improve correct classification of individual cases.
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Thomas P Baumann, Hüseyin Duyar, Marc Sollberger, Jens Kuhle, Axel Regeniter, Baltazar Gomez-Mancilla, Klaus Schmidtke, Andreas U Monsch (2010)  CSF-tau and CSF-Abeta(1-42) in posterior cortical atrophy.   Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 29: 6. 530-533 Jul  
Abstract: Our purpose was to measure Abeta(1-42), T-tau and P-tau(181) in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with posterior cortical atrophy (PCA), a presenile dementia likely to represent a variant of Alzheimer's disease (AD).
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J Lindesay, R Bullock, H Daniels, M Emre, H Förstl, L Frölich, T Gabryelewicz, P Martínez-Lage, A U Monsch, M Tsolaki, T van Laar (2010)  Turning principles into practice in Alzheimer's disease.   Int J Clin Pract 64: 9. 1198-1209 Aug  
Abstract: The prevalence of dementia is reaching epidemic proportions globally, but there remain a number of issues that prevent people with dementia, their families and caregivers, from taking control of their condition. In 2008, Alzheimer's Disease International (ADI) launched a Global Alzheimer's Disease Charter, which comprises six principles that underscore the urgency for a more ambitious approach to diagnosis, treatment and care. This review highlights some of the most important aspects and challenges of dementia diagnosis and treatment. These issues are reviewed in light of the six principles of the recent ADI Charter: promoting dementia awareness and understanding; respecting human rights; recognizing the key role of families and caregivers; providing access to health and social care; stressing the importance of optimal diagnosis and treatment; and preventing dementia through improvements in public health. The authors continue to hope that, one day, a cure for Alzheimer's disease will be found. Meanwhile, healthcare professionals need to unite in rising to the challenge of managing all cases of dementia, using the tools available to us now to work toward improved patient care.
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2009
Antoinette E Zehnder, Stefan Bläsi, Manfred Berres, Andreas U Monsch, Hannes B Stähelin, René Spiegel (2009)  Impact of APOE status on cognitive maintenance in healthy elderly persons.   Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 24: 2. 132-141 Feb  
Abstract: The epsilon4 allele, a variant of the apolipoprotein E (ApoE) gene, is the most prominent genetic risk factor for sporadic, non-familial Alzheimer's disease (AD) currently known. We investigated the impact of the ApoE-epsilon4 status on cognitive performance at repeated test administration in elderly non-symptomatic persons, with a specific focus on practice effects.
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Stefan Bläsi, Antoinette E Zehnder, Manfred Berres, Kirsten I Taylor, René Spiegel, Andreas U Monsch (2009)  Norms for change in episodic memory as a prerequisite for the diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI).   Neuropsychology 23: 2. 189-200 Mar  
Abstract: The new diagnostic criteria for mild cognitive impairment (MCI) from the International Working Group on Mild Cognitive Impairment (Winblad et al., 2004, p. 243) list "evidence of decline over time in objective cognitive tasks" as one diagnostic sign, implying the repeated neuropsychological testing. This study aimed to compare different assessment methods of longitudinal change based on the performances of 366 cognitively healthy participants (237 men, 129 women) examined with a German version of the California Verbal Learning Test (Delis, Kramer, Kaplan, & Ober, 1987) at baseline and 2 years later. Age, education, gender, and baseline performance were taken into account. Results revealed marked practice effects after 2 years. Normal ranges for change that controls for practice effects and regression to the mean proved to be superior to other reliable change indexes. This new method allows for more valid interpretation of change in neuropsychological functioning and thus diagnosis of MCI.
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Melanie Gamberini, Daniel Bolliger, Giovanna A Lurati Buse, Christoph S Burkhart, Martin Grapow, Alexa Gagneux, Miodrag Filipovic, Manfred D Seeberger, Hans Pargger, Martin Siegemund, Thierry Carrel, Walter O Seiler, Manfred Berres, Stephan P Strebel, Andreas U Monsch, Luzius A Steiner (2009)  Rivastigmine for the prevention of postoperative delirium in elderly patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery--a randomized controlled trial.   Crit Care Med 37: 5. 1762-1768 May  
Abstract: Cardiac surgery is frequently followed by postoperative delirium, which is associated with increased 1-year mortality, late cognitive deficits, and higher costs. Currently, there are no recommendations for pharmacologic prevention of postoperative delirium. Impaired cholinergic transmission is believed to play an important role in the development of delirium. We tested the hypothesis that prophylactic short-term administration of oral rivastigmine, a cholinesterase inhibitor, reduces the incidence of delirium in elderly patients during the first 6 days after elective cardiac surgery.
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2008
M M Ehrensperger, A Grether, G Romer, M Berres, A U Monsch, L Kappos, B Steck (2008)  Neuropsychological dysfunction, depression, physical disability, and coping processes in families with a parent affected by multiple sclerosis.   Mult Scler 14: 8. 1106-1112 Sep  
Abstract: Families with a parent suffering from multiple sclerosis (MS) must cope with the unpredictable course of the disease. Most studies analyzing factors that influence coping abilities in families with a member affected with MS used questionnaires to assess this ability.
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Kirsten I Taylor, Alphonse Probst, André R Miserez, Andreas U Monsch, Markus Tolnay (2008)  Clinical course of neuropathologically confirmed frontal-variant Alzheimer's disease.   Nat Clin Pract Neurol 4: 4. 226-232 Apr  
Abstract: Background A 66-year-old man presented with a 3-year history of personality changes marked by increasing apathy, social withdrawal and deficits in complex attention, and a 1-year history of progressive memory problems and difficulties in planning and carrying out complex tasks. Investigations Three neuropsychological examinations over 2 years, neurological examination, routine laboratory tests, brain MRI, single-photon emission CT scan, genetic analyses, and neuropathological examination. Diagnosis A clinical diagnosis of frontal-variant frontotemporal dementia was superseded by postmortem neuropathological evidence, which established a diagnosis of frontal-variant Alzheimer's disease. Management The patient and his spouse were referred for counseling, and the patient was referred for follow-up examinations.
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M Berres, A Zehnder, S Bläsi, A U Monsch (2008)  Evaluation of diagnostic scores with adjustment for covariates.   Stat Med 27: 10. 1777-1790 May  
Abstract: Diagnostic tests yield measurements on very different types of scales. Quantitative scales may consist of non-negative integers, either unbounded or bounded, with a fixed number of different values, or they may consist of continuous or percentage values. Remembering a different threshold value for each diagnostic variable would be cumbersome, in particular if covariates have to be taken into account. As a convenient way to overcome such problems we propose to compute z-scores for all measurements. They will be adjusted for covariates so that any individual can be judged on any test result on one single scale with an appropriate standard normal quantile as threshold. Two issues need to be addressed: Selection of covariates in the regression model which delivers the adjustment and normality of the residuals. The first will be treated by cross-validation and the latter by applying an appropriate transformation. We apply this methodology to neuropsychological tests and adjust for age, length of education and sex. Normality of residuals is needed on the diagnostically relevant side only. This allows to use parametric transformations, which can be easily implemented, e.g. in database systems. Since we have measurements at baseline and at follow-up we also analyze change values in a similar manner. For ease of interpretation, we transform the resulting z-scores back to the original scale.
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H Förstl, H Bickel, L Frölich, H J Gertz, A Kurz, J Marksteiner, A U Monsch, J Pantel, R Schmidt, P Schönknecht (2008)  [Mild cognitive impairment with predictors of rapid decline].   Dtsch Med Wochenschr 133: 9. 431-436 Feb  
Abstract: Half the patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) will develop dementia over a four-year period. The scientific literature was searched and analysed for predictors of rapid decline (MCI-plus) in patients with MCI. The most important predictors of fast cognitive deterioration were found to be: old age, previous rapid decline, severity and multiplicity of cognitive deficits, somatic co-morbidity, vascular and Alzheimer-type changes in the brain, Alzheimer-type cerebrospinal fluid findings and apolipoprotein E4 polymorphism. Many patients with MCI suffer from anxiety, depression or apathy and subtle, but subjectively significant, difficulties in the activities of daily living. It is concluded that MCI-plus offers a window for medical and psychological prophylaxis and rehabilitation.
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2007
Gertrud M Steuerwald, Thomas P Baumann, Kirsten I Taylor, Michael Mittag, Heiner Adams, Markus Tolnay, Andreas U Monsch (2007)  Clinical characteristics of dementia associated with argyrophilic grain disease.   Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 24: 3. 229-234 08  
Abstract: We aimed at characterizing the clinical features of dementia associated with argyrophilic grain disease (AgD).
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Antoinette E Zehnder, Stafan Bläsi, Manfred Berres, Rene Spiegel, Andreas U Monsch (2007)  Lack of practice effects on neuropsychological tests as early cognitive markers of Alzheimer disease?   Am J Alzheimers Dis Other Demen 22: 5. 416-426 Oct/Nov  
Abstract: Reliable assessment of change from previous cognitive functioning is a prerequisite for determining the possible presence of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease (AD). We investigated whether standardized change scores on the German version of the Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease-Neuropsychological Assessment Battery (CERAD-NAB) could be used for early diagnosis of AD and whether change scores on the CERAD-NAB are superior in this respect to scores recorded on 1 occasion only. Three hundred seventy-four normal control subjects were assessed twice. Data from 95 patients with mostly mild probable AD were collected at their first entry to a memory clinic and an average of 1.1 +/- 0.24 years later. It is concluded that repeated testing with the CERAD-NAB does not generally add to improved diagnostic accuracy for mild and very mild AD and cannot, therefore, be recommended as a routine clinical procedure.
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2006
Emilie Ritter, Olivier Després, Andreas U Monsch, Lilianne Manning (2006)  Topographical recognition memory sensitive to amnestic mild cognitive impairment but not to depression.   Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 21: 10. 924-929 Oct  
Abstract: Amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) involves episodic memory. The person who presents aMCI has a high risk of developing Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, prediction of deterioration to dementia in cases of aMCI can be confounded with depression due to lack of specificity on selective memory tests. Finding a test sensitive to aMCI but not to depression would be potentially most useful to subsequent longitudinal studies researching the neuropsychological markers of preclinical AD. We hypothesized that the performance on a topographical memory task would be sensitive to the aMCI condition, while depression would not influence such a performance.
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Lorenz Imhof, Margaret I Wallhagen, Romy Mahrer-Imhof, Andreas U Monsch (2006)  Becoming forgetful: how elderly people deal with forgetfulness in everyday life.   Am J Alzheimers Dis Other Demen 21: 5. 347-353 Oct/Nov  
Abstract: Studies show that complaints about being forgetful are weakly correlated with standardized measures of memory impairment. Little attention has been paid to those complaints in a healthy elderly population. Therefore, this qualitative, grounded-theory study investigated the experiences and consequences of becoming forgetful. In-depth interviews with 32 participants were conducted and analyzed. The findings show that forgetfulness became part of daily life through 3 strategies, conceptualized as doing forgetfulness: (1) reducing complexity; (2) creating and maintaining routines; and (3) dealing with feelings of embarrassment and shame. The well-being of people experiencing forgetfulness depended on how successfully they performed the strategies of doing forgetfulness. Gaining insight into this process allows health care professionals to assess the phenomenon early and to individualize counseling and further diagnostic procedures.
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2005
Dorothee Brubacher, Georg B Brubacher, Hannes B Stähelin, Andreas U Monsch (2005)  Weight history over a forty-year time period.   Int J Vitam Nutr Res 75: 4. 290-296 Jul  
Abstract: Mortality and disease risk assessments consider body mass index (BMI), among other parameters. Nowadays optimal BMI is discussed controversially as risk assessments are usually performed using BMI of arbitrarily chosen age points. A more comprehensive approach could be based on BMI history. However, longitudinal studies investigating BMI are rare.
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